Formation and manipulation of a metallic wire of single gold atoms
A.I. Yanson, G. Rubio Bollinger, H.E. van den Brom, N. Agrait, J.M., van Ruitenbeek

TL;DR
This paper reports the formation of stable, one-atom-thick gold chains during the breaking of metallic contacts, demonstrating quantized conductance and potential for atomic-scale electronic devices.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of gold atomic chains formed during contact breaking, extending previous observations to longer, stable chains with quantized conductance.
Findings
Gold chains can be at least four atoms long.
Conductance remains at the quantum unit 2e^2/h during chain formation.
Chains act as one-dimensional quantized nanowires.
Abstract
The continuing miniaturization of microelectronics raises the prospect of nanometre-scale devices with mechanical and electrical properties that are qualitatively different from those at larger dimensions. The investigation of these properties, and particularly the increasing influence of quantum effects on electron transport, has therefore attracted much interest. Quantum properties of the conductance can be observed when `breaking' a metallic contact: as two metal electrodes in contact with each other are slowly retracted, the contact area undergoes structural rearrangements until it consists in its final stages of only a few bridging atoms. Just before the abrubt transition to tunneling occurs, the electrical conductance through a monovalent metal contact is always close to a value of 2e^2/h, where e is the charge on an electron and h is Plack's constant. This value corresponds to…
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